The present paper reports on the phonological form of one child's
productive vocabulary from age 0;10 to 1;8 with primary focus on his
production of multisyllabic targets. A large percentage of his multisyllabic
vocabulary was produced as one syllable until the age of 1;6.
This limitation was not due to a tendency to extract only single syllables
from the speech stream, but rather due primarily to a limitation on
production. While some portion of his one-syllable productions could be
interpreted as the result of single syllable extraction, a sizeable portion
affirmed that he extracted the target size correctly by his inclusion of first
and final target phonemes in his productions (e.g. [po] for piano and
[kiz] for candies). The resolution of this limitation coincides with his
move toward two-word speech. We conclude that there is a developmental and
perhaps maturational limitation in the capacity to carry
out the processes underlying word and sentence production.
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